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Term for entire Clan

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The following section is not an accurate summary:

"The Clan" is an overarching term; every Neanderthal is a member of the Clan. Organizationally, they live in smaller tribes, also called "Clans" but marked with a specific totem animal; for instance, Ayla is adopted into the novel's eponymous Clan of the Cave Bear.


In actuality, in the novels, all Neanderthals are members of the Clan of the Cave Bear. That is not a specific term for the clan which adopt's Ayla, or even the group of clans that all go to the same Clan Gathering as the clan which adopts her. Clan of the Cave Bear is the term for all the people, for Ursus, the Cave Bear spirit is the one honored most by the Clan, for their legends claim, in Ayla's favorite tale, the story of Durc, it was the spirit of Ursus who taught them to live in caves and wear fur to survive the cold. Totems are for individual clan members, not clan groupings. The clans are not known by a totem animal. Rather, they are known by their leader. For example, when Ayla is first adopted, the clan which takes her in is Brun's Clan. In the later books, after she has left the Clan, she has to remind herself that it is no longer Brun's Clan, it is Broud's Clan, because leadership was passed down from Brun to his mate's son Broud shortly before she was forced to leave them.

The fact that all clans are part of the Clan of the Cave Bear and honor Ursus above all other totems is further reinforced in The Plains of Passage when Jondalar exchanges tokens representing the kinship debt owed by each with Guban, a member of the Clan from territory far removed from the area Brun/Broud's clan inhabited, as depicted in Chapter 40 of that novel.

"He took a pouch from a loop of his belt and poured its contents into his hand. Guban looked surprised. In Jondalar's hand were several claws and two canine teeth of a cave bear, the cave bear he had killed the previous summer shortly after they had started on their long Journey. He held out one of the teeth. 'Please accept this as a token of kinship.'

Guban restained his eagerness. A cave bear tooth was a powerful token, it bestowed high status, and the giving of one showed great honor. It pleased him to think that this man of the Others had acknowledged his position, and the debt he owed the entire Clan so appropriately. It would make the proper impression when he told the rest about this exchange. He accepted the token of kinship, closed it inside his fist, and gripped it firmly."

-- This is from p. 785 of the November 1991 Bantam paperback edition I have of Plains of Passage.


Cadrac 00:33, 21 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Giving up personal names by spiritual leaders doesn't happen amongst the Mammoth Hunters

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Those Who Serve abandon their personal names in favor of the name of their people and god. To avoid confusion, they generally take appendices after their cave or camp (Mamut of the Lion Camp, Zelandoni of the Ninth Cave), leading Ayla to muse that they have traded their names for counting words. As with the Clan, one among Those Who Serve is generally acknowledged (or elected) First. (There is no Last.)


Actually, this is not true amongst the Mamutoi. Only the Mamut of the Lion Camp does not have a personal name. The other Mamuts do. The Lion Camp Mamut's personal name is basically lost in the reaches of time because he has outlived all his contemporaries and, as the most prestigious of the Mamut, has become synonymous with his position, but Mamut do not, as a matter of standard practice, give up their personal names. For example, the Mamut who was a camp Headman, and who wished to mate with Ayla so that she could bring the Mammoth Hearth to his lodge and justify his claiming of the name Mammoth Camp (since the Mamutoi name camps after the hearth the Headman lives at and the hearth goes with the woman) was named Vincavec, and the Mamut with whom Ayla was eager to engage in healer shop talk with at the Mamutoi Summer Meeting, the First Healer of the Mamutoi, was named Lomie.

Cadrac 00:33, 21 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Ancient Clan Spirits

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In the section on Clan religion it states:

"However, the ancient spirits that are honored in the highest ceremonies--the spirits which can be spoken to only by the mog-urs--bear female names."

This is not accurate. The ancient, female, spirits are not honored in the Clan's highest ceremonies. They, in fact, have not been honored is so long that Creb has to search his memories deeply to even rediscover their existence. They are from a time almost before the Clan was Clan and women still hunted. The above quote implies that they were still, during Ayla's time with the clan, honored, and further implies they were very important to the Clan, since they were only honored during their highest ceremonies and only mog-urs could speak to them. None of which is supported by the actual text of the book.

Cadrac 03:05, 20 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Sexual Customs

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Not all of the customs involving sex and sexual maturity take place at Summer Meetings, as evidenced in multiple books in the series. Examples of those that do not are Nuria's First Rites (which may or may not be typical for her people, as they may have arranged the ceremony specially to satisfy Haruma's desire for a descendant with blue eyes), smaller meetings arranged amongst the Mamutoi for First Rites for those girls who enter menarche during the fall so that they would not go unprotected so long, and, of course, Mother festivals, which can and do take place any time of year.

Cadrac 03:19, 20 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

"These women are often pregnant by the end of the summer, which is believed to be the Great Earth Mother smiling upon their piety," says the plot summary. That's ambiguous. Is it the women's pregnancy, or the summer itself, that manifests the Earth Mother's smiling on their piety? I suspect it's the former, but can't tell. Mucketymuck (talk) 03:58, 26 July 2020 (UTC)[reply]
I would say it is obvious enough that the intention of that sentence is the first. Debresser (talk) 11:49, 26 July 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Other characters?

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The thing about hyperlinks is that they serve as a navigational aid and serve as a meta-reading alert that something important is being highlighted. With that in mind, to a certain extent it would be perfectly fine to create wikilinks to many of the major characters in the story (Thonolan, Marthona, Durc, Broud, Folara, Zolena, Marona, Rydag, Mamut, Ranec, Attaroa) without bothering to create articles about them. Having said that, why don't we create articles about them?—and, if we do, how should we organize them? In my opinion, out of the hundreds of people we've met, only Durc, Thonolan and Zolena are influential enough to really deserve individual articles at this point; for everyone else we would have to create a mammoth-sized "Characters in the Earth's Children series" page. We could split them up by book... But then what happens to Mamutoi, Sharamudoi, Lanzadonii and Zelandonii characters who appear in more than one book? The most reasonable option from that standpoint seems to be to split them up by people instead... But then we have a lot of satellite pages like Hadumai Characters in the Earth's Children series which will get deleted in about three seconds, because who cares about Jeren, Haduma, Tamen and Noria? I sure don't.

Anybody have any thoughts as to how to do this? ...Anybody else even thinking about this? ~Marblespire (talk) 04:25, 2 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Well, rather than creating separate pages for each of the tribes that only have minor characters we could do the Characters in the Earth's Children series page divided by tribes as a sort of dramatis personæ listing only summaries of their roles in the series. Any tribe or character that deserved a more in depth treatment could have a wikilink to their main article. Cadrac (talk) 01:44, 8 May 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Fair use rationale for Image:SheltersOfStone.jpg

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Image:SheltersOfStone.jpg is being used on this article. I notice the image page specifies that the image is being used under fair use but there is no explanation or rationale as to why its use in this Wikipedia article constitutes fair use. In addition to the boilerplate fair use template, you must also write out on the image description page a specific explanation or rationale for why using this image in each article is consistent with fair use.

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BetacommandBot (talk) 04:48, 18 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]

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The Clan of the Cave Bear

   See also these related factual (background) topics:
   Aurignacian culture, Gravettian culture, Animal Usage in the Gravettian, Venus figurines

I believe these links are misplaced. These articles are related to non-Neanderthal cultures. As such, they are not relevant to The Clan of the Cave Bear, as this book takes place almost exclusively within a Neanderthal cultural context. They are much more appropriately related to the later novels in the series (and are in fact already present at the beginning of the section on The Mammoth Hunters). I am unsure whether it would be more appropriate to move this instance to the section on The Valley of Horses, or consolidate both references into one set of references outside the discussion of any particular novel, as the references are appropriately related to ALL of the books after the first. I would appreciate comments on this by others involved in editing and maintaining this page before I make any changes.

Cadrac (talk) 14:36, 30 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

JEAN AUEL

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DEAR JEAN I HAVE BEEN A AVID READER SINCE CLAN OF THE CAVE BEAR PLEASE FINISH YOUR SIXTH BOOK I AM NOW 62 YEARS OLD AND I WOULD LOVE TO KNOW THE END OF THIS SERIES BEFORE I DIE . AND NOW I HEAR YOU ARE GOING TO WRITE A SEVENTH BOOK AND TO BE HONEST I PRAY THAT S A RUMOR I LOVE YOUR BOOKS BUT IT REALLY UP SETS ME WHEN I HEAR THAT MONEY IS THE ISSUE FOR COMPLETING THE BOOKS THAT I HAVE MENTIONED SO PLEASE BE THE WRITER AND PERSON I THINK YOU ARE AND FOR ALL THE PEOPLE LIKE ME WHO HAVE PATIENTLY WAITED FAITHFULLYFOR SAID BOOKS PLEASE.................................... ...................YOUR FAITHFUL READER MARGIE —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.67.242.99 (talk) 03:21, 25 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]

I've seen it happen with many long series: the first books are fairly closely spaced, being published about a year or two apart. Then the intervals get longer. And longer. How long has it been since George RR Martin wrote a "Song of Ice and Fire" novel? Jean Auel's intervals have been 2 years (B1-B2), 3 years (B2-B3), 5 years (B3-B4), and 12 years (B4-B5). It has been eight years since the publication of Book 5. It might be eight more years before book 6 appears. Some authors don't live long enough to finish their work. Robert Jordan comes to mind. I'm taking bets on Martin. Why does this happen? Maybe authors get bored with their stories, or perhaps they become enmired in the complexity of their own webs, weary of trying to remember what is what and how things are.

Jean Auel! I like the Earth's Children series generally, but you put too many explicit sex scenes in some of the books. One of those per book is enough, I think. The others probably ought to be left implicit, since the similarity of the characters' doings in several explicit sex scenes becomes repetitive and somewhat trite. Jenab6 (talk) 13:36, 9 May 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Does This Book Even Exist

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I looked Everywhere on the internet and i couldn't find it! Unless someone can show me, i don't think this exists! And Where is the Fan Website that writes Fan Fiction and organizes things and all other stuff that's mentioned?24.7.204.215 (talk) 03:59, 13 August 2009 (UTC)[reply]

"Earth's Children" is the generic name for the author's series of books set in prehistoric Europe. There are currently 5 books published, with the finale anticipated eagerly by fans. Rumor implies that the author may split the sixth book because of the complexity of the last story. Here are the names of the books:
1 The Clan of the Cave Bear
2 The Valley of Horses
3 The Mammoth Hunters
4 The Plains of Passage
5 The Shelters of Stone
6/7 The final book (unpublished)
Hope that helps. GwenW (talk) 06:36, 13 August 2009 (UTC)[reply]
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